Other Aspects of the EcoStruXure Initiative

Other aspects of the EcoStruXure initiative, which will be rolled out
throughout the year, include a Facebook-like collaborative portal that will
give people the chance to work with each other and with Schneider to address
energy issues, a program to teach college-age students the fundamentals of
energy audits for buildings, and a set of reference architectures for various
types of buildings, from data centers to factories to homes. Those reference
architectures will start to be released in the fourth quarter.
There also will be a certification program for energy architects.

In addition, Schneider is looking to bring power to what Davis
said are the 1.6 billion people in the world without it. He spoke of a recent
project in which the company installed a power system for a remote Vietnamese
fishing village.

Another program will bring prepaid electricity programs to people without
the means to pay for power. With the program, people can prepay for a certain
amount of power, and then when they need it, the power can be turned on to
their home until the task is completed.
Davis and Chris Curtis, executive vice president of Schneider's North
American business unit, outlined the increasing problems-both environmental and
economic-caused by the inefficient use of energy. There were graphics showing
the disappearing coastlines in the United States
caused by rising water levels and a photo of a polar bear stranded on a melting
ice floe.
They also noted that the increasing costs of inefficient power consumption,
from the amount of carbon being pumped into the atmosphere to the fact that it
costs businesses significantly more money now to run a server than to buy one.
Davis said the opportunities are
there now for businesses to begin driving down their power costs, from smart
controls to greater automation of energy processes to better use of energy
management tools and software. There is also a continuing drive for greater
intelligence in buildings, he said.
A key problem is that there is resistance from key people in businesses-such
as building and facilities managers to IT administrators-to take a lot of the
steps that can save them money now.
"There are a lot of things we can do already, with good ROI, but no one's
doing it," Curtis said. "So it's a huge problem."
Schneider, with its wide reach into all these different areas, will be a key
player in helping drive up energy efficiency in buildings, he and Davis
said. They pointed to a wide range of partners, including such IT players and
Dell, IBM and VMware.